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Floods and landslides cause havoc in Mumbai

Reuters
Posted online: Wednesday, July 27, 2005 at 0921 hours IST
Updated: Tuesday, August 02, 2005 at 1443 hours IST

Rain Mumbai, July 27: Mumbai FloodFloods and landslides killed at least 99 people in western India on Wednesday, with many more more feared dead after a wall of mud flattened a village.

Thousands of people were evacuated and tens of thousands more were stranded as floodwaters raged throughout Mumbai, bringing road, air and rail links to a halt.

Rescue teams reached the village of Juigaon, 150 km (90 miles) south of Mumbai, and began digging for survivors and bodies after a landslide flattened or buried more than 30 houses late on Tuesday. Officials estimated 150 people may have been caught in the avalanche of mud.

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"It is very likely that a large number of people would have died in that landslide," state relief secretary, Krishna Vatsa, told Reuters. "But we are hoping to find survivors."

The army, navy and air force were called in to help as floodwaters swept the coast of Maharashtra state.

Vatsa said the situation in the worst-affected region south of Mumbai was improving as the rains had stopped and water levels were receding. But the rescuers' work was hampered because the weather had even disrupted their communications networks.

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In Mumbai, meteorologists said heavy rains and high winds were forecast to continue for another 48 hours, after a record 94 cm (37 inches) of rainfall in the north of the city during the previous day, the highest since 1974.

Electricity and phone links were cut in Mumbai, home to the Bollywood movie industry, schools were shut and commuters were stranded for a second day as trains and buses were cancelled.

"We have deployed the army to help people stranded and to evacuate those living in the low-lying areas," a government spokesman said. "We have already evacuated around 10,000 people."

About 40 of the deaths were in Mumbai, including seven children killed by a landslide in the upmarket suburb of Andheri.

14-HOUR COMMUTE

Many office workers slept in their offices on Tuesday night or checked into hotels. Indian television reported that dozens of people were trapped overnight in a double-decker bus.

Commuter Alex Anthony, 44, said it had taken him 14 hours to reach home in the early hours of Wednesday, walking on rail tracks and wading chest-deep through water.

"It was like a river outside the station, the water was pushing us and we could be swept away," he said. "Firemen tied ropes to lamp-posts and a chain of people held onto it to get through the water."

Trading on Mumbai's bond and currency markets was abandoned, flights in and out of the city were rerouted or cancelled and the government called a state holiday, advising people to stay home.

Companies postponed board meetings and tourists to the city of 15 million people waited for news about their flights, with the lobby of the swanky seafront Taj Mahal hotel filled with disconsolate travellers and their luggage.

Outside the city the armed forces helped relief officials air-drop food packets to stranded people.

"The situation is so grave (that despite) these human efforts, we are not in a position to reach out to the people who are in the districts," Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh said.

The chaos highlighted Mumbai's desperately overloaded and inadequate infrastructure. Authorities have recently begun demolishing slums as part of a hugely ambitious $6 billion plan to turn the city into a new Shanghai.

Flooding in the monsoon season in India, which runs from June to September, kills hundreds of people each year and disrupts life in wide swathes of land.



 

 
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